Combs v. Cooper

5 Minn. 254
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 5 Minn. 254 (Combs v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Combs v. Cooper, 5 Minn. 254 (Mich. 1861).

Opinion

By the Oourt.

Atwater, J.

I have had great difficulty in satisfying my own mind as to the proper disposition of this case, resulting from the conflict of authorities as to what constitutes an estoppel inpais, and the application of the principle to the various reported cases. Scarcely any branch of the law has given rise to more discussion, and resulted in so great a difference of opinion among jurists, in the definition and application of the principle to the various cases presented in the Courts for adjudication. Many of the cases where the principle has been invoked, seem to have been decided by the [260]*260views entertained of tbe equities of tbe particular ease, and not in accordance with any settled principle. In tbe Ducbess of Kingston’s case, 2 /Smdth’s Leadh/ng Oases, tbe subject is elaborately discussed, but not with tbe usual clearness and precision of tbe learned American Editors of that work, as the student will find little more than a synopsis of tbe conflicting authorities on tbe subject, without tbejr'esult of any settled principle deduced from them. As tbe case at bar is tbe first of tbe kind so far as I am aware, in tbe Courts of this State, where tbe doctrine of an estoppel mpcds has been invoked in regard to a transfer of real estate, it is important that it be decided if possible, on a correct principle which may govern like cases in future; and I shall examine to some extent tbe cases cited on tbe argument, as well as others, and endeavor to apply to this case tbe principle which seems best supported by reason and authority.

I think it is manifest that many of tbe cases cited by tbe Respondent, are not applicable as authority, to sustain bis position, that tbe Plaintiff is estopped from asserting bis legal rights, by bis acts and declarations in tbe premises. In Jackson vs. Van Carleur, 11 Johns 123, tbe parties were held concluded by a line agreed upon between them. But tbe Court say that “whether Bleecker’s line is correct or not, cannot now be made a question between these parties; for they undertook to run and establish a line for themselves, which is tbe line run by Shephard in bis survey about nineteen years ago. After suoh a lapse of time and the repeated acquiescence on tbe part of tbe lessors, it would be unjust and inexpedient to disturb that line, admitting that it bad been incorrectly settled at first.” This decision is placed upon tbe express ground of lapse of time and repeated acquiescence in tbe boundary line as agreed upon, and not upon tbe simple fact, that such division bad been made. The case of Jackson vs. Cole, 16 John, 255, presents an entirely different state of facts from those in tbe case at bar, and was not decided on tbe ground that the acts or declarations of tbe parties bad estop-ped them from asserting their legal rights, although tbe Court in its opinion says, that, “we are ..also, of opinion, that tbe acts of tbe parties in this case, if it was necessary to have re[261]*261course to them, have definitely fixed the boundary line between lots number 37, and number 46, as held and contended for the Defendants.” But the ground upon which this óbit&r is based, appeal’s further from the opinion not to have been founded on any legal or equitable'right, but as the Court re-marts, “after patents have issued, and after such long acquiescence, it is now too late to attempt to correct mistakes. If the corners of lots as fixed by the Surveyor General originally, are now to be disregarded, it is not too much to say> that almost every lot in the military tract will be thrown into confusion, and become the source of controversy.” It can easily be understood how forcible such a reason would be in the mind of the Court, against disturbing a boundary which, it would appear, had been acquiesced in for a great number of years.

In the case_of Jackson vs. Ogden, 7 John, 238, it was held, as appears by the syllabus, that, “after various mesne conveyances, during a lapse of near eighteen years, the parties should be bound by their actual location under their deeds, according to the metes and bounds given in the original survey, without reference to the map and patents.” An examination of that case will clearly show the distinction between it, and the one.at bar, and the language of Chief Justice Kent, in delivering the opinion of the Court, shows that the case was not decided on the mere ground that the parties had agreed upon a dividing line, but as he says, “they located according to the facts addressed to the^senses, and without having recourse to the Secretary’s office; and when the question of location was thus rendered ambiguous or uncertain, by the contradiction between the map and survey, (and both were referred to in the patent and early deeds) a practical location and construction given by the parties, and acquiesced in through a series of transfers, and for a great number of years, until the lands had become cultivated and had grown into value, cannot but operate with great, if not with decisive force.” And in this case it will be observed that the Court were divided in opinion.

In Rockwell vs. Adams, 6 Wend. 467, Savage Ch. J., lays down the rule of law as applicable to the case, as follows: [262]*262“That the acts and declarations of parties as to location, may control the courses and distances in their .deeds; and, to give operation to such acts and declarations, it is not necessary that their effect should be known to the parties themselves, and that acquiescence in an erroneous location, for a great length of time, shall be conclusive upon the party making or acquiescing in such location.” So in McCormick vs. Barnum, 10 Wen. 104, it was held, that “an owner of land is bound by a division line, recognized by his surveyor as correct, where the owner has given deeds in conformity to a map and field book made by the surveyor, and no efficient attempt is made for the period of 22 years to correct the line.” In the case of Kipp vs. Norton, 12 Wen. 127, I understand the Court to decide only, that if there is a disputed line between two adjoining proprietors of land, it may be settled between them by a location made by both, or made by one, and acquiesced in by the other for so long a time as to be evidence of an agreement to the line. In that case no express agreement was found, and it was held that acquiescence for a period of only four or five years, did not furnish sufficient evidence to conclude the Plaintiff .from asserting his legal title, although the Défendant had erected valuable improvements on the land claimed by Plaintiff. I think it would be a fair inference, that had an express agreement existed as to the line, (as in the case at bar) the Plaintiff would not have been permitted to recover. But I think the opinion would not even then be conclusive upon the case at bar, since the Court there speak only of a disputed line between the parties, and where parties have agreed upon their rights for the purpose of settling or avoiding litigation, by a compromise and perhaps each yielding a part of what he deemed his j nst rights, an element enters into the case, which does not exist in the present, where no controversy had ever existed between the parties, but each supposed he was taking exactly what his deed gave him.

Adams vs. Rockwell, 16 Wend.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Minn. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combs-v-cooper-minn-1861.